ACT AI-native payments are live in Nigeria — your checkout flow is already behind
DECIDE Debt has overtaken equity in African startup funding — decide now which structure fits your stage
ACT Nigeria's new NIMC Act creates a compliance deadline and a product opportunity simultaneously
WATCH 4G Capital crossing $1 billion in SME lending signals that embedded credit at scale is proven — watch for margin compression
WATCH Nigeria's proposed pan-African payment card could redraw the rails your business depends on
ACTFintech Infrastructure
AI-native payments are live in Nigeria — your checkout flow is already behind
Paystack Index lets users transact via ChatGPT and Claude today, covering airtime, P2P transfers, and food orders
Why it matters
When a dominant payment rail embeds into AI assistants, the interface layer shifts away from apps and browsers. Founders who do not expose their services via AI-compatible APIs will lose transaction volume to those who do, with no warning in their analytics until the drop is significant.
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Do this week: Audit whether your payment or commerce endpoints are callable by an AI agent. If not, prioritise an API wrapper that accepts natural-language-initiated transactions and test it against Paystack Index's documented interface.
Debt has overtaken equity in African startup funding — decide now which structure fits your stage
Across Africa in 2026, debt instruments have surpassed equity as the primary funding mechanism for startups
Why it matters
This is a structural shift, not a cycle. Equity is scarcer and more dilutive; debt is available but requires predictable cash flows. Founders who still model their runway around an equity round may be pitching into a market that has moved on. The decision about which instrument to pursue determines your covenants, your governance, and your exit options.
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Do this week: Pull your last 12 months of revenue data and calculate your debt-service coverage ratio at two interest rate scenarios. If coverage is above 1.3x, open a conversation with one debt provider this week. If below, identify which unit economics must improve before debt becomes viable.
Nigeria's new NIMC Act creates a compliance deadline and a product opportunity simultaneously
President Tinubu has signed the NIMC Act 2026, replacing the 2007 law with updated digital identity, data protection, and electronic trust services requirements
Why it matters
A new identity law resets the compliance clock for every product that touches KYC, onboarding, or data storage in Nigeria. It also opens a window: products built natively on the new framework gain a trust signal that legacy competitors cannot easily replicate. The window is narrow — early movers set the standard.
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Do this week: Assign one person to read the NIMC Act 2026 in full this week and produce a one-page gap analysis against your current identity and data handling stack. Flag any onboarding flow that relies on the 2007 framework assumptions.
4G Capital crossing $1 billion in SME lending signals that embedded credit at scale is proven — watch for margin compression
4G Capital has surpassed $1 billion in cumulative lending to small businesses across Kenya and Uganda
Why it matters
A single lender reaching $1 billion in SME credit in two markets confirms the demand thesis but also signals that the category is maturing. New entrants will face a lender with deep credit data, established collections infrastructure, and the ability to price risk more accurately. If your product touches SME credit, the competitive moat is narrowing.
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Do this week: Map the SME credit providers operating in your target market and note their stated loan sizes, interest rates, and sector focus. Identify one underserved segment or geography where $1 billion in lending has not yet reached.
Nigeria's proposed pan-African payment card could redraw the rails your business depends on
Nigeria has formally proposed a pan-African payment card designed to eliminate foreign currency dependence in intra-African transactions
Why it matters
If adopted, a pan-African card standard would disintermediate dollar and euro settlement for regional commerce, reducing FX costs but also disrupting existing payment corridors. Businesses built on current cross-border rails — including remittance margins and FX spread revenue — face structural change. The proposal is early-stage but government-backed, which means the timeline is unpredictable.
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Do this week: Identify what percentage of your transaction volume or revenue depends on FX conversion between African currencies. If it exceeds 20 percent, begin a scenario model for what your unit economics look like if that spread compresses by half.
The Brief tells you what changed. The FounderWise products help you turn your own traction into investor-readable proof. Start with the free Traction Audit.